| Literature DB >> 28289233 |
Giuseppe Giordano1,2, Marianna Carbone1, Maria Letizia Ciavatta1, Eleonora Silvano1,3, Margherita Gavagnin1, Mary J Garson4, Karen L Cheney5, I Wayan Mudianta6, Giovanni Fulvio Russo2, Guido Villani1, Laura Magliozzi3, Gianluca Polese3, Christian Zidorn1,7, Adele Cutignano1, Angelo Fontana1, Michael T Ghiselin8, Ernesto Mollo9.
Abstract
Olfaction is considered a distance sense; hence, aquatic olfaction is thought to be mediated only by molecules dissolved in water. Here, we challenge this view by showing that shrimp and fish can recognize the presence of hydrophobic olfactory cues by a "tactile" form of chemoreception. We found that odiferous furanosesquiterpenes protect both the Mediterranean octocoral Maasella edwardsi and its specialist predator, the nudibranch gastropod Tritonia striata, from potential predators. Food treated with the terpenes elicited avoidance responses in the cooccurring shrimp Palaemon elegans Rejection was also induced in the shrimp by the memory recall of postingestive aversive effects (vomiting), evoked by repeatedly touching the food with chemosensory mouthparts. Consistent with their emetic properties once ingested, the compounds were highly toxic to brine shrimp. Further experiments on the zebrafish showed that this vertebrate aquatic model also avoids food treated with one of the terpenes, after having experienced gastrointestinal malaise. The fish refused the food after repeatedly touching it with their mouths. The compounds studied thus act simultaneously as (i) toxins, (ii) avoidance-learning inducers, and (iii) aposematic odorant cues. Although they produce a characteristic smell when exposed to air, the compounds are detected by direct contact with the emitter in aquatic environments and are perceived at high doses that are not compatible with their transport in water. The mouthparts of both the shrimp and the fish have thus been shown to act as "aquatic noses," supporting a substantial revision of the current definition of the chemical senses based upon spatial criteria.Entities:
Keywords: avoidance learning; chemical defense; marine chemical ecology; olfactory aposematism; volatile terpenes
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28289233 PMCID: PMC5380024 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1614655114
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205